Australia’s Fortescue may adjust the timeline for its $550 million green hydrogen project in Arizona as it assesses the change in U.S. energy policy under the Trump administration, CEO Mark Hutchinson said during the company’s earnings call Thursday. The company also cut its full-year expenditures at its energy division by one-fifth to $400 million, a result of lower spending on green energy projects.
Fortescue’s Arizona Hydrogen project (#18 in table on Page 2 and map on Page 4 of our recently updated Hydrogen Billboard report) is expected to produce up to 11,000 metric tons/year of liquid green hydrogen aimed at the heavy-duty, on-road transportation sector. Construction at the site began in May 2024 and production is scheduled to begin in 2026.
Hutchinson said the company is analyzing how it may be affected by policy changes in the U.S., including the 45V tax credit for clean hydrogen production.
“The Trump administration, there's been a flurry of executive actions, some sections of the [Inflation Reduction Act] from the grants have come into question, including the hydrogen production tax credit,” he told analysts during the call. “So, until we really have a much clearer view on that, we are being quite cautious about what we're doing.”